Archive for the 'Trends' Category

A project that shows innovation in action

Peter Jackson, chief scientist and vice president, Thomson Reuters, participated in a panel discussion at the SIAA NetGain Conference in San Francisco.

The topic was innovation and the challenges facing information companies in the digital age and amid the rise of social media.

Jackson, who is on the NetGain Steering Committee, discussed some of what Thomson Reuters has been working on, including the Reuters Insider multimedia project. Jackson’s team is involved in finding new ways to index video online and make it searchable, providing more insight and context to the end-user.

According to Jackson, the project is in beta and close to official release. He says it required new ways of thinking by his teams, and new uses for existing patented technology that’s already fueling many customer applications within the legal business.

In this video interview after the session, Jackson talked about the conference, the innovative work at Thomson Reuters and also provides more specifics on his team’s work on Reuters Insider:

Posted by Kevin Hunt, senior communications specialist, Thomson Reuters

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Software industry learns to lead

The attendees here at the SIIA NetGain Conference in San Francisco are from a variety of businesses, from startups to major corporations.

They come to SIIA events to learn what their colleagues and competitors are doing to deliver content and information, and gain new insight on the new tools and business practices as Ed Keating, the vice president of the Content Division of the SIIA, explains:

Posted by Kevin Hunt, senior communications specialist, Thomson Reuters

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Get your head in the clouds

Cloud computing is a concept and a reality embraced by many businesses dealing with data. The idea that digital information lives “in the clouds” means many businesses can cut their operating costs, no matter what industry they are in.

In a panel discussion about cloud computing here at the SIIA NetGain Conference, Larry Schwartz explained how his company, Newstex, relies on Amazon to be the cloud for video hosting among other services.

Schwartz, who is on the Steering Committee for the NetGain Conference, has some advice for businesses thinking about getting on a cloud in this video interview, and further explains how his company is doing it:

Posted by Kevin Hunt, senior communications specialist, Thomson Reuters

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Judy Estrin on innovation

peterjacksonJudy Estrin is a serial entrepreneur, a Disney and Fedex board member, an ex-CTO of Cisco, and the author of Closing the Innovation Gap. I read this recently, and was then fortunate enough to hear her give a keynote at SIIA NetGain 2009 in San Francisco. The talk followed the contents and spirit of the book fairly closely.

The “gap” of her title derives from the fact that we are today living off the fat of the 1950s and 60s, when government and commercial spending on genuine R&D was way higher than it is today. She argues that we have an “innovation deficit”, whereby current gains are really incremental and based on past achievements. Meanwhile, management philosophies such as “You can’t manage what you can’t measure” have hurt our ability to fund exploratory work that does not meet immediate business goals.

Her concept of “sustainable innovation” goes beyond any single idea to encompass an environment, or ecosystem, that supports novel approaches to problems. “Innovation doesn’t just happen,” says Estrin, “you have to nurture it.” The ecosystem she identifies consists of a nutrient environment of funding, policy, education, culture and leadership that supports the activities of research, development and applications building.

She identifies the following as core values – questioning, risk, openness, patience and trust – and states that these values need to be in balance. For example, too much trust leads to blind faith, while too much risk leads to recklessness, as we have seen with innovations on Wall Street. She also stresses the need to move beyond silos and false dichotomies, e.g., science versus arts, research versus development, and recognize the value of people who have some breadth and function as connectors in organizations.

Estrin distinguishes between three types of innovation: breakthrough (totally new idea, e.g., light bulb), incremental (tuning a new idea to generate a product, e.g., flashlight), and orthogonal (combining existing ideas into something new, e.g., sneakers with lights). She points out that only the second is customer-driven; customers are not going to do real innovation for you. I think this is certainly true of the Internet publishing space.

Speaking for Corporate R&D, I like to think that we practice what I call “serial innovation”, producing a steady stream of incremental and orthogonal improvements that satisfy customers while waiting for the “big bang” of a breakthrough. Genuine breakthroughs are few and far between, and you can’t plan for them. But staying as close as you can to the research literature and being conversant with the latest methods are good ways to improve your chances.

Peter Jackson
Chief Scientist and Vice President
Thomson Reuters

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Legal analysis of servicer safe harbor

The Helping Families Save Their Homes Act (H.R. 1106) has been passed by the U.S. House of Representatives and is now under consideration in the U.S. Senate. It is aimed at preventing mortgage foreclosures and enhancing mortgage credit availability.

The bill, and the concept of servicer safe harbor, also is now the subject of a free audio webcast and white paper from securitization litigation expert Talcott J. Franklin, co-author of two noted legal treatises on securitization from West.

In addition to Franklin, the webcast features:

  • Aline van Duyn, U.S. Markets Editor, Financial Times
  • Eric J. Brenner, partner, Boies, Schiller & Flexner LLP
  • Micah S. Green, partner, Patton Boggs LLP, and former President and CEO of The Bond Market Association
  • Hamish P. M. Hume, partner, Boies, Schiller & Flexner LLP
  • Katherine M. Porter, associate professor, The University of Iowa College of Law

The free webcast, titled The Next Scandal in the Credit Crisis, is available here.

The free white paper from Franklin, titled Mortgage Servicer Safe Harbor: A Legal and Policy Analysis, is here.

Franklin is the co-author of , Emergency Economic Stabilization Act Handbook and Mortgage and Asset Backed Securities Litigation Handbook, published by West Legalworks.

Posted by Kevin Hunt, senior communications specialist, Thomson Reuters

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City Pages provides legal research history lesson

An article in City Pages traces the history of West and the value and expertise that West and Thomson Reuters provide through their professional legal research and reference products.

Erin Carlyle conducted interviews with several leaders within the legal businesses of Thomson Reuters, including President & CEO Peter Warwick.

City Pages is a weekly newspaper in Minneapolis/St. Paul, covering news and entertainment in the Twin Cities and Minnesota.

Posted by Kevin Hunt, senior communications specialist, Thomson Reuters

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First iPhone app from Thomson Reuters

blacksappscreen

Sometimes innovation starts with a trip to a bar.

Literally.

While winding down at the end of a day of recruiting new talent for West at Michigan State University last October, Dan Bennett and Jay Peyer started talking about the kinds of iPhone and iPod touch applications they could create.

Little did they know that conversation would put them on a path to develop the first Thomson Reuters app for the popular Apple mobile devices.

Today their creation, a Black’s Law Dictionary app, is officially for sale on iTunes.

blacksappscreen2

The app features the 8th edition of the relied-upon and respected dictionary, edited by Bryan A. Garner. Black’s is considered by many attorneys, legal professionals and law students to be the most citable and credible legal dictionary. And a mobile version just made sense, to provide easy access to its legal terms and phrases and embedded audio of that information which does not require an Internet connection.

The process to create the Black’s Law Dictionary app allowed Bennett, a senior director in New Product Technology at West, and Peyer, a senior software engineer in Application Technology, to break new ground.

In this video interview, they explain how they made it happen:

The Black’s Law Dictionary app from Thomson Reuters is available for purchase on the App Store in Apple’s iTunes for $49.99.

Even Garner, himself very much a fan of books, is excited to see Black’s Law on the iPhone.

“The idea that you can have a very full, elaborate, complex and richly textured book like Black’s available at your fingertips is fantastic,” Garner says. “I myself am stubbornly in favor of print sources, but I like to watch my daughters use their iPhones. And I know that there’s another generation of people who really prefer the electronic medium at their fingertips.”

While Black’s Law Dictionary is the first iPhone application from Thomson Reuters, there’s more in the queue. We’ll keep you posted as more apps are launched.

More coverage:
ABAJournal.com

Robert Ambrogi’s LawSites

iPhone J.D.

Posted by Kevin Hunt, senior communications specialist, Thomson Reuters

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One year later: Thomson Reuters, Legal

trlogolow

Today we’re marking the anniversary of Thomson’s acquisition of Reuters, and the launch of the Thomson Reuters brand across the company.

In this video, Peter Warwick, president and CEO, Thomson Reuters, Legal and members of his executive team talk about what we’ve achieved in the business in the last year, and what opportunities lie ahead:

Posted by John Shaughnessy, senior director, Corporate Communications, Thomson Reuters

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More marketing insight from the LMA Conference

lmalogo

We want to point you again to the Hubbard One Blog for some great insight we gathered at last week’s Legal Marketing Association (LMA) Conference through some video interviews:

Jonathan Fitzgarrald, chief marketing officer at Greenberg Glusker, talks about how the tough economic times can be beneficial for legal marketers.

Maureen Leuenberger, senior director, Consulting & Services for Hubbard One, discusses the benefits of the company’s client support services to help firms be more efficient and effective in their marketing efforts.

Adam Severson, director of business development, Dorsey & Whitney LLP, told us how his firm gains greater insight into its relationships with clients and people within the firm.

Posted by Kevin Hunt, senior communications specialist, Thomson Reuters

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Client development on display at ABA Techshow

abatechshowlogo

We’ve moved on to the ABA Techshow at the Chicago Hilton. And it’s clear that the client development businesses of Thomson Reuters are showcasing their technology and tools at Techshow.

Preston McKenzie, vice president and general manager of Client Development for Thomson Reuters, explains in this video interview why it’s a good time to learn more about the benefits of these businesses:

Posted by Kevin Hunt, senior communications specialist, Thomson Reuters

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Legal marketing is about the ideas

We caught up with Heather Morse Milligan at the LMA Conference. She’s the director of marketing at Barger & Wolen LLP. We asked her to weigh in on the impact of the economy on the work of law firm marketers in this video interview:

Heather Morse Milligan has a blog, The Legal Watercooler. You also can find her on Twitter as @heathermilligan.

Posted by Kevin Hunt, senior communications specialist, Thomson Reuters

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Getting to the “what” of the LMA Conference

As we’ve pointed out this week, the theme of the LMA Conference is “Change … Now What?”

We talked with two members of the LMA Conference Committee to get their perspectives on how attendees can maximize their time here and put into practice what they hear and learn.

Jeanne Hammerstrom is co-chair of the conference and the chief marketing officer at Benesch, Friedlander, Coplan & Aronoff LLP. She told us about some of the opportunities for the attendees at LMA, in this video interview:

We also talked with Doug Hoover, a consultant at Hildebrandt, part of Thomson Reuters, who served with Hammerstrom on the 2009 LMA Conference Committee. Hoover said the firms that sent people to the LMA Conference will be better off because of it:

Posted by Kevin Hunt, senior communications specialist, Thomson Reuters

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Challenging times for immigration law

Attorney – and West author – Careen Shannon recently paid a visit to the headquarters of the legal businesses of Thomson Reuters to help get the word out about a new book.

Shannon, along with Austin Fragomen and Daniel Montalvo, wrote the State Immigration Employment Compliance Handbook.

Shannon is with Fragomen, Del Rey, Bernsen & Loewy. She also is an adjunct professor at at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law.

In this video interview, she told us there’s a real need for attorneys and businesses to pay closer attention to state immigration laws and the consequences of violating them:

Shannon, along with Fragomen and Montalvo, also is featured in this Westcast audio podcast, discussing the reason for the rise in state immigration laws and the challenges for abiding by them.

Posted by Kevin Hunt, senior communications specialist, Thomson Reuters

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The future of the book business

peterjacksonThis is a guest post to WestBlog from Peter Jackson, chief scientist and vice president at Thomson Reuters in Eagan, Minn.:

A Nov. 2007 National Endowment for the Arts study showed that both book reading and book purchases are in decline (see “To Read Or Not To Read: A Question of National Consequence”).

This is true even for popular titles, and even among college graduates. Meanwhile, online sellers are eroding book sales in stores, and the used book market is stronger than ever. With the recent advent of the Amazon Kindle, even the physical manifestation of the book seems to be in a state of flux.

What is the future of the book business? Continue reading ‘The future of the book business’

Legal industry investing in future

While legal industry advisor David Baker thinks there are a lot of “heads down, get it done” efforts underway by law firms of all sizes, he sees some taking steps to take advantage of potential opportunities on the other side of the economic downturn.

We talked with Baker at LegalTech New York. He is the chairman and co-founder of Baker Robbins & Company, part of Thomson Reuters. Baker specializes in strategic technology planning for law firms and lawyers.

We interviewed him about the impact of the economy on technology spend, the fate of e-discovery vendors and also got his take on the attendance at LegalTech 2009:

Posted by Kevin Hunt, senior communications specialist, Thomson Reuters

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2009

Welcome to WestBlog

This blog, discontinued and moved to LegalCurrent.com in May 2009, presented commentary and information about the practice and business of law, and the products and services of the legal businesses of Thomson Reuters.

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